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Brief
Encounter (1945/1946, UK)
In one of the greatest tearjerker films of all time
by young director David Lean:
- the heartbreaking circumstances of two doomed, ill-fated
lovers: middle-class housewife Laura (Celia Johnson) and doctor
Alec (Trevor Howard) in their weekly meetings
- their first encounter at the Milford Junction train
station when he removed engine soot from her eye
The Two Illicit Lovers
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First Encounter: Removing Soot From Laura's Eye
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Laura and Alec
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Confession of Love To Each Other
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- the soundtrack of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto
No. 2
- the scene after a boatride when they confessed their
love to each other but Laura cautioned:
"We mustn't behave like this..."
- Laura's fantasy - viewed in the train window - of
being with Alex in romantic settings
- their aborted attempt at a tryst to consummate their
affair, when it was interrupted
- Alec's profession of love: ("I love you, Laura.
I shall love you always until the end of my life")
- the scene of their final day together when they were
interrupted by friend Dolly Messiter (Everley Gregg) during their
last, painful, repressed goodbye (both at the start and end of the
film) as Alec gently placed his hand on her shoulder and disappeared
forever (on a medical journey to Africa): ("I felt the touch
of his hand on my shoulder for a moment. And then he walked away,
away out of my life forever...Dolly still went on talking, but I
wasn't listening to her. I was listening to the sound of his train
starting. And it did. I said to myself: 'He didn't go. At the last
minute his courage failed him; he couldn't have gone. Any minute
now, he'll come back into the refreshment room pretending he's forgotten
something.' I prayed for him to do that, just so that I could see
him again, for an instant. (pause) But the minutes went by...")
- the anguished Laura's near-suicide attempt (with
a mad, self-destructive urge signified by a tilted camera) when she
jumped up abruptly from the table and rushed outside the tea room
to the rail platform. Her internal state was externalized and stylized
as disorienting and unbalanced. At the edge of the platform as the
train screeched through, she contemplated throwing herself under
the passing train, but lacked the courage to do so
- the final scene in the company of her understanding
and thankful husband Fred Jesson (Cyril Raymond), when he asked her:
("Whatever your dream was, it wasn't a very happy one, was it?...Is
there anything I can do to help?...You've been a long way away....Thank
you for coming back to me"), and she responded by weeping in
his arms
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Final Goodbye Between Alec and Laura at Train Station
Laura's Near-Suicide
Laura's Husband "Thank you for coming back to me"
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